Salt dissolution tectonism and origin of lacustrine carbonate beds: Mn‐Fe‐calcite and Mn‐siderite micro‐spherulite fabrics of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western Canada

Abstract Several lacustrine carbonate beds, each a metre‐thick interval of densely packed Mn‐rich sideritic micro‐spherulites or Mn‐rich ferroan calcite micro‐spherulites, are recorded for the first time within strata of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation of the northern Athabasca Oil Sands dep...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paul L. Broughton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-06-01
Series:The Depositional Record
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/dep2.179
_version_ 1818235153501126656
author Paul L. Broughton
author_facet Paul L. Broughton
author_sort Paul L. Broughton
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Several lacustrine carbonate beds, each a metre‐thick interval of densely packed Mn‐rich sideritic micro‐spherulites or Mn‐rich ferroan calcite micro‐spherulites, are recorded for the first time within strata of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation of the northern Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western Canada. A lower McMurray lacustrine carbonate deposit is characterised by a metre‐thick bed fabric of Mn‐rich siderite micro‐spherulites. The middle and upper interval McMurray beds developed fabrics of Mn2+‐rich ferroan calcite micro‐spherulites. These carbonate beds represent saline lacustrine depositional environments that resulted from the lake bottom sediments ingressed from below by Mn2+‐Fe2+‐rich carbonate‐saturated brines. These up‐section migrations of Devonian formation water were sourced from dissolution trends developed in limestone and halite‐anhydrite beds of the underlying Devonian Prairie Evaporite during Cordilleran deformation of the Alberta Basin foreland. These brines ascended to the overlying McMurray Formation sediments along dissolution‐collapse structures such as breccia pipes, sinkholes and margins of differentially subsided Upper Devonian fault blocks. The up‐section migration of a sulphate‐saturated Fe2+ and Mn2+‐rich brine resulted in the ingress of a lower McMurray lacustrine bottom sediment at a site associated with the development of a peat mire terrain. Microbial redox of the lake bottom sediment resulted in a carbonate bed of micro‐spherulitic fabrics of Mn‐rich siderite interwoven with pyrite laminae. Subsequent salt dissolution events and up‐section migrations of Devonian brine during deposition of the middle and upper McMurray intervals resulted in similar carbonate‐saturated but sulphate‐poor chemistry. These saline flows also ingressed lacustrine bottom sediments below, and resulted in limestone beds of densely packed spherulitic fabrics of Mn‐ferroan calcite, not siderite. These deposits provide insight into largely unknown dispositions of voluminous brine resulting from salt dissolution trends below the Athabasca Oil Sands and further our understanding of controversial McMurray depositional processes.
first_indexed 2024-12-12T11:49:27Z
format Article
id doaj.art-bb69383b270343e08775b0326e78066d
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2055-4877
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-12T11:49:27Z
publishDate 2022-06-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series The Depositional Record
spelling doaj.art-bb69383b270343e08775b0326e78066d2022-12-22T00:25:22ZengWileyThe Depositional Record2055-48772022-06-018265668410.1002/dep2.179Salt dissolution tectonism and origin of lacustrine carbonate beds: Mn‐Fe‐calcite and Mn‐siderite micro‐spherulite fabrics of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western CanadaPaul L. Broughton0Broughton and Associates Calgary AB CanadaAbstract Several lacustrine carbonate beds, each a metre‐thick interval of densely packed Mn‐rich sideritic micro‐spherulites or Mn‐rich ferroan calcite micro‐spherulites, are recorded for the first time within strata of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation of the northern Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western Canada. A lower McMurray lacustrine carbonate deposit is characterised by a metre‐thick bed fabric of Mn‐rich siderite micro‐spherulites. The middle and upper interval McMurray beds developed fabrics of Mn2+‐rich ferroan calcite micro‐spherulites. These carbonate beds represent saline lacustrine depositional environments that resulted from the lake bottom sediments ingressed from below by Mn2+‐Fe2+‐rich carbonate‐saturated brines. These up‐section migrations of Devonian formation water were sourced from dissolution trends developed in limestone and halite‐anhydrite beds of the underlying Devonian Prairie Evaporite during Cordilleran deformation of the Alberta Basin foreland. These brines ascended to the overlying McMurray Formation sediments along dissolution‐collapse structures such as breccia pipes, sinkholes and margins of differentially subsided Upper Devonian fault blocks. The up‐section migration of a sulphate‐saturated Fe2+ and Mn2+‐rich brine resulted in the ingress of a lower McMurray lacustrine bottom sediment at a site associated with the development of a peat mire terrain. Microbial redox of the lake bottom sediment resulted in a carbonate bed of micro‐spherulitic fabrics of Mn‐rich siderite interwoven with pyrite laminae. Subsequent salt dissolution events and up‐section migrations of Devonian brine during deposition of the middle and upper McMurray intervals resulted in similar carbonate‐saturated but sulphate‐poor chemistry. These saline flows also ingressed lacustrine bottom sediments below, and resulted in limestone beds of densely packed spherulitic fabrics of Mn‐ferroan calcite, not siderite. These deposits provide insight into largely unknown dispositions of voluminous brine resulting from salt dissolution trends below the Athabasca Oil Sands and further our understanding of controversial McMurray depositional processes.https://doi.org/10.1002/dep2.179Alberta BasinAthabasca oil sandsferroan calcite micro‐spherulitesMcMurray Formationsalt dissolution tectonismsiderite micro‐spherulites
spellingShingle Paul L. Broughton
Salt dissolution tectonism and origin of lacustrine carbonate beds: Mn‐Fe‐calcite and Mn‐siderite micro‐spherulite fabrics of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western Canada
The Depositional Record
Alberta Basin
Athabasca oil sands
ferroan calcite micro‐spherulites
McMurray Formation
salt dissolution tectonism
siderite micro‐spherulites
title Salt dissolution tectonism and origin of lacustrine carbonate beds: Mn‐Fe‐calcite and Mn‐siderite micro‐spherulite fabrics of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western Canada
title_full Salt dissolution tectonism and origin of lacustrine carbonate beds: Mn‐Fe‐calcite and Mn‐siderite micro‐spherulite fabrics of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western Canada
title_fullStr Salt dissolution tectonism and origin of lacustrine carbonate beds: Mn‐Fe‐calcite and Mn‐siderite micro‐spherulite fabrics of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western Canada
title_full_unstemmed Salt dissolution tectonism and origin of lacustrine carbonate beds: Mn‐Fe‐calcite and Mn‐siderite micro‐spherulite fabrics of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western Canada
title_short Salt dissolution tectonism and origin of lacustrine carbonate beds: Mn‐Fe‐calcite and Mn‐siderite micro‐spherulite fabrics of the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, western Canada
title_sort salt dissolution tectonism and origin of lacustrine carbonate beds mn fe calcite and mn siderite micro spherulite fabrics of the lower cretaceous mcmurray formation athabasca oil sands deposit western canada
topic Alberta Basin
Athabasca oil sands
ferroan calcite micro‐spherulites
McMurray Formation
salt dissolution tectonism
siderite micro‐spherulites
url https://doi.org/10.1002/dep2.179
work_keys_str_mv AT paullbroughton saltdissolutiontectonismandoriginoflacustrinecarbonatebedsmnfecalciteandmnsideritemicrospherulitefabricsofthelowercretaceousmcmurrayformationathabascaoilsandsdepositwesterncanada